European, UK shares snap winning streak, silver surges

Vikram Subhedar

4 Min Read

Traders work at their desks in front of the German share price index, DAX board, at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, July 1, 2016. REUTERS/Staff/Remote

LONDON (Reuters) - The post-Brexit recovery across European markets sputtered to a halt on Monday with major equity indices lower and safe-haven demand for precious metals helping the price of silver surge to near a two-year high.

Financial and commodities markets in the United States were closed for the July 4 public holiday. U.S. stock futures ESc1 SPc1 were up 0.1 percent in low volumes.

Earlier in the day, the Australian dollar recovered from wobbly start caused by political uncertainty post-election while Asian shares and base metal prices rose, partly on expectations economic stimulus from China.

“We do not believe that we will see a sustained upmove.Positioning is not washed out, market internals are not positive and political uncertainty will linger,” they wrote in a note.

Caution is likely to persist through the week with the Bank England scheduled to publish its quarterly financial stability report on Tuesday, the June U.S. Federal Reserve meeting minutes due on Wednesday and U.S. jobs data on Friday.

In bond markets, worries about the health of Italian banks and some 20 billion euros ($22.2 billion) of bond supply in the region this week combined to halt a post-Brexit tumble inregional borrowing costs.

Italian banking index .FTIT8300 fell more than 3.5 percenton Monday, while the European Central Bank asked Italy’s BancaMonte dei Paschi di Siena (BMPS.MI) to slash its bad debts by 40percent over three years, heaping more pressure on Rome and Brussels to stabilize the Italian banking system.

Italy is in talks with the European Commission on devising aplan to recapitalizes Italian lenders with public money limiting losses for bank investors, an EU spokeswoman said on Sunday.

UK POLITICS

Fears of an economic slowdown in the Britain have taken a toll on shares of smaller domestically focused companies, which have significantly underperformed export-oriented blue chips. This continued on Monday with the FTSE mid caps index .FTC off more than 2 percent.

Sterling came under pressure following poor data that showed Britain’s construction sector PM survey suffered its worst contraction in seven years in the run up to the vote to leave the European Union.

The currency recovered some ground in late trading, rising 0.1 percent to $1.3284 GBP=D4, still nursing its losses after an 11-percent plunge to a 31-year trough of $1.3122 a week ago following last month’s shock Brevity vote.The weekend’s headlines were dominated by mixed messages from the candidates seeking to replace David Cameron asConservative Party leader and prime minister, offering markets little certainty about the outlook for the months ahead.

The euro was little changed at $1.1140 EUR= and was down slightly against its Japanese counterpart at 114.27 yen EURJPY=R. Crude oil prices extended gains from Friday’s surge after comments by the Saudi energy minister that the oil market isheading towards balance despite signs of slowing demand in Asia.

Spot gold XAU= added 0.7 percent to $1,352.10 an ounce after gaining 1.5 percent on Friday and about 9 percent in June. Silver XAG= spiked 3 percent higher to $20.30 an ounce, breaking the $20-dollar level for the first time in nearly two years.